Annual Report

Willamette Family Media

The quality and effectiveness of any health care service is dependent upon the employment of qualified and motivated individuals. Willamette Family is looking for enthusiastic team members to share in our mission to provide readily accessible, quality mental health and substance abuse services in an atmosphere that promotes compassion, respect and well being.

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MISSION

The mission of Willamette Family, Inc. is to provide readily accessible, quality mental health and substance abuse/addiction care for men, women, youth, and families in an atmosphere that promotes compassion, healing, respect and well-being for all.

TREATMENT PHILOSOPHY

Willamette Family, Inc. offers gender-specific services for women and families in need of mental health and/or trauma treatment as well as substance abuse prevention and treatment. Our program uses an integrated, holistic, strengths-based approach to support healing and growth, including education and intervention for clients and families.

Willamette Family is proud to announce that it is Going Green! We are looking for ways where we can operate in a more environmentally friendly way, and we ask for your support. One new opportunity is offering an e-mail option for our quarterly mailings. To receive our quarterly e-mails, please fill out the provided form at the back of this newsletter or go to our website and enter your email information. If at any time you feel that you no longer wish to receive these e-mails from us, there will be an “Unsubscribe” button where you can easily remove your email from our mailing list. As always, we will still offer our newsletters and updates as we always have, via US Postal Service if that is your preference. You can also keep current (and paperless!) with Willamette Family by liking us on Facebook; look for the 100 Best Non-Profits profile photo! Thank you for taking part in helping us to conserve this planet’s resources for the next generation!

Testimony:

We fall so that we can pick ourselves back up again. These words are spoken often to people throughout their life and while they can be so easily dismissed in times of laughter and fun, in times of hardship and strain these words can provide the motivation to keep moving forward in the right direction. This is also true for the individuals at Willamette Family’s Carlton House – to learn from their past mistakes and change the course of their lives and to become good fathers. These are men who learned to survive in a different way, fathers who for the first time are learning how to become fathers, as this was not something they experienced growing up. At the same time, these fathers are taking the time to show their children how to pick themselves up and how to take that next step – the same way they’re learning. This is an opportunity for these fathers who have had little to no involvement with their families to finally connect with their children and to take on a role to be a part of their lives.

These are the things that Parenting Coaches at Willamette Family work with on a daily basis – to ensure that fathers get time with their children while they are in treatment. Through parenting classes such as the Nurturing Parenting Program, which teaches parents to take care of themselves so they can take care of their children, and the Circle of Security, which teaches parents how to build relationships with their child, these men learn how to become responsible caring fathers. Staff work to help these fathers move through guilt and be there for their kids. Family groups are also provided as a space for fathers to reconnect with their children and their partner. Each of these fathers are given the opportunity to learn a new way of being in the world as a sober and active father to their children.

These fathers are taking a stand with an attitude that says, “The pain stops with me.” They are taking these classes and the responsibility to stop the pain from passing on to their child. If you’re interested in learning more about our Dad’s Program, please watch our most recent completed video. You can access this video by visiting our website: www.wfts.org or on the following link: https://youtu.be/RINwQi3FG6I

A first citizen among us:

I adopted my daughter when she was eight years old and she already had a lot of baggage from her childhood. A lot of kids from challenging backgrounds will act out before they become teenagers; she experienced things I never would have wished for her. When she was home, I would try to get her into treatment appointments at various places, but we only got to the first evaluation and then she’d be gone.

One day, someone working with her in rehab offered her a scholarship to attend Willamette Family Treatment Services. I didn’t trust the program, not because of Willamette Family, but because of her incapability of staying away from the drug scene. I had been too trusting in the past when she told me she wasn’t doing drugs, so I watched her recovery with a jaundiced eye.

I really think Willamette Family was the catalyst in her recovery and I am so grateful. It was very hard for her, but the consistency, counseling, and meeting other people in the same boat who also wanted to make changes played into her decision to stick with it. With Willamette Family’s help she took responsibility and we came back into each other’s lives.

She’s been sober for almost five years and the difference in her is amazing. There’s a lot of work still ahead of her, but now I can encourage her and she’ll get through it. That has been such a joy as a mother. Today, she’s a student at Lane Community college studying hospitality. She even started her own non-profit making clothing for children in disadvantaged countries…I’m going over there today and she’s going to show me the latest things she’s finished.”